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Another kick ass reboot with the one and only Bill Booth! - Photo by James Macca Macdonald. William Booth. Bill Booth. Bill "Lord of the Three Rings" Motherfuckin' BOOTH! Astounding is all I have to say. When you stop to think about literally all of the game changing inventions this man has brought to our sport, any one of which would put him deep in the Hall of Fame, and then put them all together... WOW! You have a man who has almost single handedly shaped modern skydiving into what we know and love today. I can't lie, at least a few times in this interview I'm literally gushing with gratitude, because let's face it, without the BOC throw out pilot chute, the three ring system, tandems... How many of us would have a vastly different life right now? A wealth of knowledge and a great and entertaining story teller, it is my great pleasure to present to you Mr. Bill Booth on Lunatic Fringe.
Tonight's guest is the founder of the Aural Fixation romance audiobook fan group on Facebook, Lydia Rella! Lydia tells me about being a voracious young reader, and her introduction into the romance genre at an early age. Then we discuss her motivation for creating a Facebook group for romance audiobook listeners, and what makes a romance audiobook great. All this and more over some coffee spiked with some boozy eggnog and some homemade spiced rum! You can find Lydia at the Aural Fixation Facebook group at https://www.facebook.com/groups/auralfixationaudio, and on Twitter and Instagram at @auralfixationfb. Tonight's speakeasy chat is brought to you by David Stever's Raven Rain, narrated by Bill Lord: https://www.audible.com/pd/Raven-Rain-A-Johnny-Delarosa-Thriller-Audiobook/B08NN8SB2B.
My guest tonight is independent audiobook producer and director Elishia Merricks! Elishia describes how her focus changed from acting to directing during her time at Royal Holloway (the university, not the prison). Elishia then describes how she found her way into the world of audiobooks after a move across the pond. All this and more over an English Garden riff and a French Laundry! You can find Elishia at http://www.englishgirlinnewyork.org, on Twitter at @elishia_e, and on Instagram at @elishiasbooks.n.bobs and @elishia.in.newyork. Tonight's episode is brought to you by Squeaky Cheese Productions: http://www.squeakycheeseproductions.com. Tonight's episode is also brought to you by David Stever's Raven Rain, narrated by Bill Lord: https://www.audible.com/pd/Raven-Rain-A-Johnny-Delarosa-Thriller-Audiobook/B08NN8SB2B.
My guest tonight is the owner of Mosaic Audio, Amy Rubinate! Amy describes the path she took that led her from being a cabaret singer, to voicing children's toys, to narrating audiobooks. Amy also tells me how the pandemic has changed the way that Mosaic Audio does business, and how important it is to have a generosity of spirit in the audiobook world. All this and much more over some hot water and a rum Negroni! You can find Mosaic Audio at https://www.mosaicaudio.com. This week's Audiobook Speakeasy episode is brought to you by Squeaky Cheese Productions: http://squeakycheeseproductions.com. This week's episode is also brought to you by David Stever's Raven Rain, narrated by Bill Lord: https://www.audible.com/pd/Raven-Rain-A-Johnny-Delarosa-Thriller-Audiobook/B08NN8SB2B.
My returning guest tonight is Studio One and RX guru Don Baarns! Don and I talk about how the audiobook world has changed since he was my guest back on episode 20, from the influx of newer narrators since the pandemic hit to improvements in technology. Don also tells me about his Expert Ears service, a free service he provides to evaluate audio, and his Jumpstart programs for both PreSonus's Studio One and Izotope's RX. All this and more over some lemon-ginger echinacea juice and a SpongeBob RumPants! You can find Don online at https://redbaarnsaudio.com, and at his YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/user/RedBaarnsAudio. His Jumpstart programs are available at https://s1jumpstart.com and https://rxjumpstart.com. Tonight's Speakeasy episode is brought to you by Squeaky Cheese Productions, on the web at http://squeakycheeseproductions.com. Tonight's episode is also brought to you by David Stever's Raven Rain, narrated by Bill Lord and coming to Audible soon!
My guest tonight is audiobook narrator and narration coach Christa Lewis! Christa tells me how a chance phone conversation with audiobook legend Debra Deyan led to a sudden career shift from reading the news in English in Germany to narrating audiobooks in L.A. Christa also describes her approach to narration coaching using some appropriately artistic alliteration. All this and much more over a Blue Moon Belgian White and a Delarosa! You can find Christa online at https://www.christalewis.com and https://www.christalewisaudiobooks.com, and on Twitter and Instagram at @LiquidBelles. Tonight's Speakeasy chat is brought to you by Squeaky Cheese Productions, on the web at http://www.squeakycheeseproductions.com. Tonight's chat is also brought to you by David Stever's Raven Rain, narrated by Bill Lord and coming to Audible in October 2020.
My guest tonight is founder and CEO of Twin Flames Studios Tina Dietz! Tina tells me how everything fell into place for a life-changing move to Costa Rica. And although she realized early on that audiobook narration was not going to be her strong suit, Tina tells me how her love of recording and interviewing starting at a very early age led to the different areas of focus of Twin Flames Studios. All this and much more over a Captain Picard and a Negroni! You can find Twin Flames Studios at https://twinflamesstudios.com, and Tina on Twitter at @TheTinaDietz. The Twin Flames roster that Tina mentions can be found at https://forms.gle/VL4qzdrkrD8Mwha17. Tonight's episode is brought to you by Squeaky Cheese Productions: http://www.squeakycheeseproductions.com. Tonight's episode is also sponsored by David Stever's "Raven Rain," narrated by Bill Lord and coming to Audible in October, 2020. You can find Bill at https://www.nothingrhymeswithorange.us.
Interview with Bill Lord
Interview with Narrator Bill Lord
Check out the latest episode of the new podcast about the world and writing of USA Today bestselling author Robert Jeschonek. In this episode, Robert talks about wrecking his leg in the pool at the Y, staging his latest signing event the same night as a Pittsburgh Steelers game, and other struggles. He also talks about how the x-factor can affect the life of a writer...and shares an awesome sample from his new audiobook, In a Green Dress, Surrounded by Exploding Clowns, narrated by the one and only Bill Lord. Theme Music: "Feelin Good" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/RobertJeschonek)
William Booth. Bill Booth. Bill "Lord of the Three Rings" Motherfuckin' BOOTH! Astounding is all I have to say. When you stop to think about literally all of the game changing inventions this man has brought to our sport, any one of which would put him deep in the Hall of Fame, and then put them all together... WOW! You have a man who has almost single handedly shaped modern skydiving into what we know and love today. I can't lie, at least a few times in this interview I'm literally gushing with gratitude, because let's face it, without the BOC throw out pilot chute, the three ring system, tandems... How many of us would have a vastly different life right now? A wealth of knowledge and a great and entertaining story teller, it is my great pleasure to present to you Mr. Bill Booth on Lunatic Fringe.
Bill Lord came back from the Vietnam war and put it out of his mind for 50 years. Now in his new book he tells his firsthand account of life as a soldier in the notorious Mekong Delta.
Bill Lord was a young draftee at the height of the Vietnam War. He served in Vietnam as an infantry sergeant carrying a radio in the U.S. Army's Charlie Company, 4th/47th Infantry, 9th Infantry Division. Later in his career he served as television news executive and general manager of WJLA-TV in Washington, D.C. His book "50 Years After Vietnam" is available here: https://www.amazon.com/50-Years-After-Vietnam-Fighting-ebook/dp/B07H8R6G14. Learn more about the American Veterans Center: http://www.americanveteranscenter.org/
Bill Lord's underlying reason for writing, "50 Years After Vietnam: Lessons and Letters from the War I Hated Fighting"~ "I think a lot of us retired and thought, 'I've to get this off my chest.' Because remember, I got back from Vietnam on a Friday and started school again on the next Monday. I put it out of my mind. Honestly, I didn't talk about it much at all. Lots of people didn't even know I'd been to Vietnam." Bill Lord, Author and Retired News Director at WUSA and WJLA, and host Andy Ockershausen in-studio interview Andy Ockershausen: This is Andy Ockershausen and this is Our Town. One of the great privileges we have in Our Town is to talk to a lot of people who've made a great impression on Our Town. May not have been natives, but they've been here long enough almost to be involved with natives. The gentleman with Bill Lord. Bill Lord wrote a book called "50 Years After Vietnam" and it's a fabulous book, I read an excerpt from it, and I want to talk to you about ... you started your war here at Channel 7, Bill and welcome to Our Town. Bill Lord - University of Washington Huskie Football Fan Bill Lord: Thank you, I'm happy to be here. Andy Ockershausen: Well, looking back at your career though, I see you're University of Washington, a Huskie. Bill Lord: I am a Huskie. As a matter of fact, an intense football fan even to this day. Andy Ockershausen: Most magnificent stadium in America, I think, is on a lake. Bill Lord: It is, it's beautiful. Andy Ockershausen: It's a fabulous place. Bill Lord: One of my old houses used to look across the lake into that stadium from a couple miles away, but it was a beautiful, beautiful place and I have only the fondest memories of it. Andy Ockershausen: Now they got to play Washington State though in the big game, I think it's two weeks coming up. Bill Lord: We always were pretty confident going into the Apple Cup. Andy Ockershausen: That was a gimme wasn't it? Bill Lord: But it's no more. They are really good. Washington State is really good and it's a crap shoot. I mean honestly, whoever wins that game goes to the championship game and I would not bet, as much as I love the Huskies, I wouldn't bet on them in this one. Andy Ockershausen: No, heard they'd probably play Stanford in the championship game. That's what it looks like now. Bill Lord: Yeah, yeah. Andy Ockershausen: Well Bill, you're from Seattle area or- Bill Lord: No, I grew up in the Seattle area. Andy Ockershausen: ... Seattle's Best. You are! Bill Lord: Thank you. No, it was a great place to grow up and we had nothing but great experiences there. The University of Washington was a wonderful place to go but once you get into the media, you move. Andy Ockershausen: How'd you get in it though? I mean, you started at KRIO? Bill Lord: No, I started in Medford, Oregon but honestly, I got- Andy Ockershausen: I know Medford, Oregon. Reporter for the University of Washington Daily Bill Lord: ... I got into it at the University of Washington because I was just back from Vietnam, I was in school, and I was looking for a way to kind of being involved in things. But we were so splintered in those days, if you think the nation is divided now, it was completely divided then. Andy Ockershausen: Absolutely, I lived through it, I know what you're saying Bill. Bill Lord: And I actually found, by working on the University of Washington Daily, that I could be involved in all of the events of the day without having to be the advocate for some radical cause. I think it was like I kind of found my calling there and you know, for the next 50 years I spent working in news rooms. Andy Ockershausen: You started as a writer with the- Bill Lord: Yeah, I started as a writer on that paper. Andy Ockershausen: ... street writer? I mean, you were a reporter? Bill Lord: Just regular old reporter. Andy Ockershausen: Slogging around the streets of Seattle? Bill Lord: Well we didn't do that much slogging around.
Charlie Parker - "Now's the Time" - The Complete Savoy and Dial Master Takes http://www.wfmu.org/playlists/shows/79765
If you’re having trouble starting your grass trimmer, Bill Lord gets answers from Steve Rose, the Manager of Equipment Repairs at Stone Bros. & Byrd, to why most trimmers have trouble starting. Steve also recommends ways to store trimmers during the winter season.
Bill Lord gets some helpful tips from Steve Rose, an Equipment Repair Specialist at Stone Bros. & Byrd, to getting lawnmowers ready for the busy mowing season. Bill and Steve also gives advice on caring for lawnmowers after the mowing season ends.
Bill Lord visits the NC State Fair in Raleigh to checkout the latest information on the status and population of bees in the state. Bill interviews Don Hopkins, the NC Apiary Inspector, who gives insights to the status and population of NC bees.
Onion " Bill Lord shows how to start growing various onions in the spring season so viewers can have great tasting carrots to eat throughout the summer season
Bill Lord demonstrates how to start growing Lettuce, Spinach, Beets and other green plants in the spring season.
Bill Lord demonstrates how to start growing potatoes in the spring season so viewers can have great tasting potatoes all summer long.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hxfy8oHtxXk&list=UUbH1aq5ZyQsghyjEWfDgQNQ Show Log Episode 149, July 7, 2014 Summer 2014 Fan Hangout using http://zoom.us/ 0:00:58 Show opening followed by black screen. 0:02:12 Dan (with a bird on his shoulder) and George begin. 0:04:13 Going around the Horn: Amy Snively, L.A., Calif. http://www.amysnively.com/ Anthony Gettig, Laurium, Michigan. http://www.gettig.net/ Conrad the Bird (with Dan Lenard) in Buffalo, N.Y. Steve Tardio, NYC to be. http://www.stevetardio.com/ Dave Smith, Henderson, NV. https://www.facebook.com/VegasVOguy Diana Birdsell, Huntington Beach, Calif. https://www.facebook.com/diana.p.birdsall?fref=ts&ref=br_tf Edward Waldorf, Spanish Fort, Alabama. https://www.facebook.com/ewaldorph?fref=ts J.S. Gilbert, South San Francisco, Calif. http://jsgilbert.com/ Bill Lord, Alexandria, Va. http://www.nothingrhymeswithorange.us/ Scott Chambers, Birmingham, Ala. http://www.scottchambersvo.com/ Shelley Avellino, Albuquerque, N.M. http://www.shelleyavellino.com/ Steven Gonzales, Baton Rouge, La. http://stevengonzalesvo.com/ Ted Mcaleer, Sevilla, Spain. http://www.voiceoveruniverse.com/profile/TedMcaleer Larry Hudson, L.A., Calif. http://www.larryhudsonvo.com/ Andy Coffman, http://www.topvoiceover.com/ Jerry Reed, Syracuse, N.Y. http://jerryreed.com/ 0:14:15 The “Brady Bunch” view 0:14:47 Break 0:16:06 They're ALL back. Welcome to Lee Pinney, Costa Mesa, Calif. https://www.linkedin.com/pub/lee-pinney/9/892/603 0:17:19 Amy Snively makes an announcement. EWABS fans can get $25 off registration. The code is EWABS. You'll get an additional code to promote FaffCamp to your associates. They'll get $25 their registrations and you'll get $25 off for each person you sign up, up to $350 off. Go to http://faffcamp.com/ Amy explains FaffCamp. There are two tracks, “starting smart” and “working pro.” The agenda is set before the event, so presentations can get honed; planned but not canned. Registration goes from $375 to $449 on July 12. You can take up to six months to pay. 0:26:43 Larry Hudson asks a question: He's set up and working, but doesn't have a pre-amp. What's the difference if you spend $400-500 on a pre-amp. 0:27:27 George has clients who do just fine without a pre-amp and just plugging into a Mackey board http://www.mackie.com/products/digital_recording/index.html. That's all you need if you're doing all your processing. Things get more interesting if you're using ISDN. It comes down to subtle differences. 0:28:50 J.S. comments. Now there are more products on the market that work well. For gaming, where audio gets heavily processed, there's a huge difference when you use a high-end pre-amp for when the audio starts to have issues. Game voicers use high-end gear. You can also shorten a file without getting artifact-ing at a higher level. For the average or above-average, it may not come into to play. 0:32:02 J.S. has expensive gear because he can and he likes using it. 0:32:16 Dan comments that if you don't know what something does, you probably don't need it. Dan uses a pre-amp for the EWABS show, but for recording, he doesn't for the sake of keeping the audio chain simpler. Most people can't tell the difference. 0:34:30 Ted says “you want it warm.” It often means tubes. What makes the warm audio warm? 0:35:14 The Warm Audio brand gets discussed. http://www.warmaudio.com/ George talks about ribbon mics. Transformers add “warmth.” 0:36:10 Steve uses the Apogee mic. He wants tips for auditioning in hotel rooms. Dan says grab the quilt, go into the closet and cover yourself. 0:37:40 J.S. says to put all your clothes into the closet, use the suitcase as a table. 0:38:19 George says it's all about “damping” and reverberation issues. Use the luggage rack and put it on the room desk. 0:39:15 Scott talks about the “Eyeball.” He uses it with the VO 1A mic. 0:39:55 Debbie Irwin, NYC, joined the group. http://www.debbieirwin.com/index.htm 0:40:30 Shelley asks about agents sending different formats, some long, some short. 0:41:20 Debbie says in her experience if it comes from an agent, they want the entire thing recorded. 0:42:05 Larry comments. If it's exceedingly long, he'll ask the agent. He'll mix up the paragraphs and not read from the top. He'll read 1-2-3 as 2-3-1. 0:43:12 J.S. has a different experience. He did the whole thing and they did a “lift-off” of it. They just used the audition rather than recording the piece yet again. He feels that if you need a watermark, you shouldn't work for that company. There are lots of reasons why he'd want to hear the whole thing. 0:45:57 Break 0:50:02 They're backbackback. 0:50:47 Diana Birdsell has gotten comments from clients who say her audio sounds “overprocessed.” She uses TwistedWave, normalizes to -3, declicks, and runs an effects stack. George responds. He says it's a good sign that they know what they're doing and bothered to tell her. It sounds too compressed. George she could go in an uncheck the Limiter. And if it's still a problem, uncheck the Dynamics Processor. 0:53:10 George appreciates the feedback, it's important for him to hear when the stacks don't work as intended. 0:54:51 Dan says everybody is different and hearing it differently. The whole point of the stack is to make it better to sound good in a crappy setting. 0:55:31 Diana is new to the 416. She's gotten a random echo happening. Dan and George both think the Declicker is creating the problem. But she hears the issue before she processes. They invite her to drop a sample in Dan's “specimen cup” at http://www.homevoiceoverstudio.com/, about halfway down the page. 0:56:57 Larry asks what she's wearing. He points out his 416 picks up fabric movement. 0:57:49 Susan joins. No camera. She wonders about backups and storage. Where should she get backup gear? Dan talks about hard drives and the cloud, having 2-3 copies. 1:00:08 Anthony is a huge believer in Dept. of Redundancy Dept. He likes CrashPlan, DropBox, Carbonite, or Box.com. His wireless router died and he bought a NetGear N600, which has a USB port. You can plug a drive into it to create a home network. 1:01:50 George says there are some issues, but a Mac Airport Extreme has a port, too. You can backup at a friend's house. 1:02:54 Steve Gonzalez uses SSD's, solid state discs. He works off of them as they're quicker. George says they're expensive per gigabyte. You buy them for performance (speed) and use hard drives for off-line storage. George has all his stuff in the cloud. 1:05:05 J.S. Everyone should consider using one as a “boot drive.” He recounts his backup gear. 1:07:11 Jerry describes his backup setup. George says his system needs discipline. 1:08:23 J.S. says you can use your own FTP. Dan says the bottom line is back up in several places. 1:09:29 Break 1:10:31 They're back. And they talk about Harlan Hogan's http://voiceoveressentials.com/ Harlan knows VO. “He's been doing longer than all of our combined ages,” Dan said. 1:13:20 Thanks to Edge Studio, http://www.edgestudio.com/. The 4th weekend in August, there's a Poker Classic to raise money for the LaFontaine lab. 1:14:17 Shelley asks if anyone from Edge is going to FaffCon? George thought David, the owner is going. 1:15:58 Walt gets harassed. Dan asks him to talk about his Studio Suit. He has it strung like curtains. He rolls them out when he needs them. And they're all angled, there's no parallel surfaces. 1:18:20 Gray in Asia asked about difference between a mixer and an interface. George explains they're apples and oranges. In most cases, a mixer is useful for VO unless you're re-routing audio. Some mixers have interfaces built in. 1:22:14 Around the Horn for plugs 1:22:27 Anthony: http://www.myaudioeditor.com/ 1:23:05 Dave Smith. The iPad Air vs Mini? George: it comes down to how many pixels on the screen. 1:24:10 Debbie Irwin. 1:24:29 Edward. No plugs, his website is under construction. 1:25:12 J.S. Faux Vegas. 1:25:40 Larry: in Sept. he's doing a webinar with John Florian for new VO's. He's got some Audacity training planned, too. Click on VO Heaven tab at his website for more. 1:26:26 Scott plugged his site. 1:26:37 Shelley: She's been doing a large, interactive website. “Tales of Gigi” for a client in Bulgaria. http://www.taleswithgigi.com/ 1:27:26 Steve Gonzalez: StevenGonzalesVO.com 1:27:49 Steve Tardio—now has an extra blanket from housekeeping. He's just finished another kid's science book, called “Alien in My Pocket.” 1:28:52 Dan: if you get a chance to see the documentary he narrates: “J Street Challenge.” http://thejstreetchallenge.com/ 1:29:43 Thanks to donors! Use the donation link at EWABS.com. Clickers! Get your clickers! 1:30:33 Congratulations to Rebecca Davis again for getting the Don LaFontaine Spirit Award. 1:30:50 EWABS Essentials are growing at the YouTube Channel. (www.youtube.com/ewabsshow) 1:31:25 Bob Merkel from VoiceZam will be next week's guest. The program has been updated! 1:31:40 Thanks to wives and staff. 1:32:15 Thanks to zoom.us. 1:32:30 Thanks to Kathy Curriden and the volunteer staff. 1:33:25 Ella joins the group. 1:33:34 Sign off by the whole group. 1:34:13 End of show.
Bill Lord visits a ninety-nine year landmark, the Stone Brothers & Byrd Garden Center in downtown Durham, to highlight the helpful services and tips to growing and caring for plants.
Bill Lord visits the Durham Tobacco Campus in downtown Durham to checkout some new landscaping ways that landscapers used to renovate old tobacco warehouse areas.
Bill Lord, along with Hilary Nichols, Garden Manager at SEEDS, tour the Garden of Eatin located in downtown Durham. The Garden of Eatin is an edible garden that encourage visitors to freely eat whatever is growing in the garden.
Bill Lord visits the Charlotte Brody Educational Garden-Duke Gardens to interview Kavanah Anderson, the Education Program Coordinator. Bill and Kavanah tour the garden to show the garden’s beautiful flowers.
Bill Lord talks to Hilary Nichols, Garden Manager at Seeds, about the Community Gardening program that encourages Durham residents to produce their own food in the garden spaces located on Seeds' property.
Bill Lord gives insight on how to "Grow Radishes" in your very own garden. Bill shares an innovative way to growing very good tasting radishes.
Panel: Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County; Karen Neill, Horticultural Agent, Guilford County; Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County Features: Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County, "Planting an Early Season Vegetable Garden" Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County, "Using Plastic Tunnels to Prevent Frost Damage"
Bill Lord shares how viewers can grow Spring Snow Peas and Sugar Snaps in large and small gardens. Bill's helpful tips will have viewers enjoying there very own sugar snap peas
Bill Lord, along with Hilary Nichols, Garden Manager at SEEDS, tour the Garden of Eatin located in downtown Durham. The Garden of Eatin is an edible garden that encourage visitors to freely eat whatever is growing in the garden.
Bill Lord, along with Hilary Nichols, Garden Manager at SEEDS, tour the Inter-City Garden located on the SEEDS propriety. The Inter-City Garden is program that provides gardening space for inter-city youth to grow their own fruits and vegetables to feed their community and to sell at local farmer markets. .
Bill Lord, along with Russ Volmer, highlights some of the new variety of blackberries to grow in North Carolina. They also share how to grow the new variety of blackberries organically.
Bill Lord, along with Hilary Nichols, Garden Manager at SEEDS, tours the SEEDS Garden area to highlight what colorful plants and tasty fruits the gardeners are grow in the Seeds gardens.
Bill Lord talks to Hilary Nichols, Garden Manager at Seeds, about the Community Gardening program that encourages Durham residents to produce their own food in the garden spaces located on Seeds' property.
Bill Lord talks to Mitch Woodward, Wake County Environmental Ed. Agent and Hilary Nichols, Garden Manager, Seeds, about installing a Rain Water Harvesting system to water and care for plants and trees in the Seeds community gardens.
Bill Lord gives insight on how to "Grow Radishes" in your very own garden. Bill shares an innovative way to growing very good tasting radishes.
Bill Lord shares how viewers can grow Spring Snow Peas and Sugar Snaps in large and small gardens. Bill's helpful tips will have viewers enjoying there very own sugar snap peas
Panel: Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County; Karen Neill, Horticultural Agent, Guilford County; Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County Features: Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County, "Planting an Early Season Vegetable Garden" Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County, "Using Plastic Tunnels to Prevent Frost Damage"
Panel: Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County; Karen Neill, Horticultural Agent, Guilford County; Lucy Bradley, Extension Urban Horticultural Specialist Features: Features: Bill Lord - New Blackberry Varieties for North Carolina; Brenda Sutton, "The Produce Lady" - Sprite Melons - a North Carolina Original
Panel: Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County; Karen Neill, Horticultural Agent, Guilford County; Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County Features: Bill Lord: Local Produce Emporium Linda Blue: Saving Seeds
Panel: Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County; Karen Neill, Horticultural Agent, Guilford County; Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County Features: Brenda Sutton: Serving Up Fresh Peaches
Panel: Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County; Karen Neill, Horticultural Agent, Guilford County; Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County Features: Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County, "Planting an Early Season Vegetable Garden" Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County, "Using Plastic Tunnels to Prevent Frost Damage"
Panel: Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County; Karen Neill, Horticultural Agent, Guilford County; Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County Features: Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County, "Planting an Early Season Vegetable Garden" Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County, "Using Plastic Tunnels to Prevent Frost Damage"
Panel: Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County; Karen Neill, Horticultural Agent, Guilford County; Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County Features: Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County, "Planting an Early Season Vegetable Garden" Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County, "Using Plastic Tunnels to Prevent Frost Damage"
Panel: Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County; Karen Neill, Horticultural Agent, Guilford County; Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County Features: Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County, "Planting an Early Season Vegetable Garden" Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County, "Using Plastic Tunnels to Prevent Frost Damage"
Panel: Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County; Karen Neill, Horticultural Agent, Guilford County; Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County Features: Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County, "Planting an Early Season Vegetable Garden" Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County, "Using Plastic Tunnels to Prevent Frost Damage"
Panel: Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County; Karen Neill, Horticultural Agent, Guilford County; Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County Features: Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County, "Planting an Early Season Vegetable Garden" Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County, "Using Plastic Tunnels to Prevent Frost Damage"
Panel: Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County; Karen Neill, Horticultural Agent, Guilford County; Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County Features: Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County, "Planting an Early Season Vegetable Garden" Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County, "Using Plastic Tunnels to Prevent Frost Damage"
Panel: Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County; Karen Neill, Horticultural Agent, Guilford County; Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County Features: Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County, "Planting an Early Season Vegetable Garden" Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County, "Using Plastic Tunnels to Prevent Frost Damage"
Panel: Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County; Karen Neill, Horticultural Agent, Guilford County; Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County Features: Karen Neill, "Gardening in the Shade" Bill Lord, "Growing Asparagus"
Panel: Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County; Karen Neill, Horticultural Agent, Guilford County; Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County Features: Linda Blue, Horticultural Agent, Buncombe County, "Planting an Early Season Vegetable Garden" Bill Lord, Environmental Agent, Franklin County, "Using Plastic Tunnels to Prevent Frost Damage"
Panel: Amy-Lynn Albertson, Horticultural Agent, Davidson County; Karen Neill, Horticultural Agent, Guilford County; Lucy Bradley, Extension Urban Horticultural Specialist Features: Linda Blue, "Attracting Pollinators to Your Garden" Bill Lord, "Growing Trellis Cucumbers"